A growing share of blacks are completing high school and college. For the first time in U.S. history, 90% of Americans ages 25 and older have completed high school, according to the U.S. Census Bureau
– and the share of blacks who have done so is also at the highest level
on record. In 2017, 87% of blacks ages 25 and older had a high school
diploma or equivalent. Although the high school completion rate for
non-Hispanic whites was higher (94%) than for blacks, the gap has been
gradually shrinking. In 1993, the high school completion gap was twice
as large (14 percentage points) as it is today (7 points). The share of
blacks ages 25 and older who have completed four years of college or more has also roughly doubled during that span, from 12% in 1993 to 24% in 2017.
The black immigrant population has increased fivefold since 1980. Immigrants are making up a growing number of the overall U.S. population – but the black immigrant population is growing twice as fast. There were 4.2 million black immigrants living in the U.S. in 2016, up from 816,000 in 1980, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of census data. Since 2000 alone, the number of black immigrants in the U.S. has risen 71%.
Much of the recent growth in the black
immigrant population has been fueled by African migration. Africans made
up 39% of the overall black immigrant population in 2016, up from 24%
in 2000. Still, about half of all foreign-born blacks (49%) living in
the U.S. in 2016 were from the Caribbean.
Black households have only 10 cents in wealth for every dollar held by white households. In
2016, the median wealth of non-Hispanic white households was $171,000.
That’s 10 times the wealth of black households ($17,100) – a larger gap
than in 2007. The Great Recession of 2007-2009 triggered a stark decline
in wealth for U.S. families and further widened the already large
wealth gap between white and black households. Yet the black-to-white
wealth gap has evolved differently for families at different income
levels, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of Federal Reserve data. The wealth gap increased between middle-income black and white families, but shrank
between lower-income black and white families from 2007 to 2016. Much
of the reduction in the wealth gap among lower-income families was
driven by a sharp decrease in wealth for whites.
There
has been a steady increase in the share of Americans who view racism as
a big problem in the U.S. – especially among African Americans. Since 2009, the first year of Barack Obama’s presidency, the share of those who consider racism a big problem
has grown among all racial groups. This is especially true for black
Americans. In 2017, about eight-in-ten blacks (81%) said racism is a big
problem in society today, up from 44% eight years prior. By comparison,
about half of whites (52%) said racism is a big problem in our society,
up from 22% in 2009. There were also partisan divides on this question,
which have grown from 2015.
An overwhelming majority of blacks (92%) say whites benefit at least a fair amount from advantages that blacks do not have. This includes nearly seven-in-ten blacks (68%) who say whites benefit a great
deal. By comparison, 46% of whites say whites benefit at least a fair
amount from advantages in society that blacks don’t have, with just 16%
saying whites benefit a great deal. As with views on racism in the U.S.,
there are wide partisan divides on this question. In addition, those
who do not think white people benefit from societal advantages are more
likely to say they approve of President Donald Trump’s job performance,
while those who think whites greatly benefit from these advantages are
nearly unanimous in their disapproval of Trump.
1 comment:
How do black married couples stack up against married white couples of equivalent education?
How do single mother households of any ethnic group compare against the average of their respective tribes?
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